Welcome to St. John's !

Whether you are a long time Parishioner or a new visitor to our area, know that you are at home here with us. Please use this website to come to know your fellow parishioners better, get deeper involved in your own faith formation, find a way to help others who need your help, and keep up on Catholic news in Johnson County, Wyoming, and the world of 1.2 billion fellow Catholics everywhere else! God Bless!

From a Sermon on Charity by St. Basil the Great, Bishop of Caesarea:

St. Basil was born in Caesarea, in the region of Cappadocia, what is now the eastern part of Turkey. He was educated in Athens and secured employment as a teacher of rhetoric in Caesarea. Shortly after, he experienced a desire to live a solitary life. He stayed in various monasteries in Egypt, Palestine, and Syria and became the founder of Greek monasticism. He became the Bishop of Caesarea at a time when the Arian heresy that Jesus was not divine but only human was growing. Through dedicated pastoral zeal and preaching he was able to show the folly of such thinking and preserved orthodoxy. Exhausted, he died in 387.

"Man should be like the earth and bear fruit; he should not let inanimate matter appear to surpass him. The earth bears crops for your benefit, not for its own, but when you give to the poor, you are bearing fruit which you will gather in for yourself since the reward for good deeds goes to those who perform them.

Give to a hungry man, and what you give becomes yours, and indeed it returns to you with interest. As the sower profits from wheat that falls onto the ground, so will you profit greatly in the world to come from the bread that you place before a hungry man. Your husbandry must be the sowing of heavenly seed: Sow integrity for yourselves, says Scripture. You are going to leave your money behind you here whether you wish to or not.

On the other hand, you will take with you to the Lord the honor that you have won through good works. In the presence of the universal judge, all the people will surround you, acclaim you as a public benefactor, and tell of your generosity and kindness. Do you not see how people throw away their wealth on theatrical performances, boxing contests, mimes and fights between men and wild beasts, which are sickening to see, and all for the sake of fleeting honor and popular applause? If you are miserly with your money, how can you expect any similar honor? Your reward for the right use of the things of this world will be everlasting glory, a crown of righteousness, and the kingdom of heaven; God will welcome you, the angels will praise you, all men who have existed since the world began will call you blessed.

Do you care nothing for these things, and spurn the hopes that lie in the future for the sake of your present enjoyment? Come, distribute your wealth freely, give generously to those who are in need. Earn for yourself the psalmist’s praise: He gave freely to the poor; his righteousness will endure forever. How grateful you should be to your own benefactor; how you should beam with joy at the honor of having other people come to your door, instead of being obliged to go to theirs! But you are now ill-humored and unapproachable; you avoid meeting people, in case you might be forced to loosen your purse-strings even a little. You can say only one thing: “I have nothing to give you. I am only a poor man.” A poor man you certainly are, and destitute of real riches; you are poor in love, generosity, faith in God and hope of eternal happiness. "

News from the Vatican

Concerning a report that he and Cardinal Donald Wuerl worked out an alternative plan on sex abuse reform ahead of the recent US bishops meeting, Cardinal Blase Cupich told Crux: “At no time prior to...